Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Can Pritzker keep promise to stop gerrymande­ring?

- Austin Berg Austin Berg, a writer for the Illinois Policy Institute, wrote this column for the IllinoisNe­wsNetwork.

Illinois House Republican­s are out with an independen­t mapmaking plan. And Gov. J.B. Pritzker is on the record saying he’ll reject a legislativ­e map drawn under political influence. The 2020 census is just around the corner, after which Illinois must redrawits district lines.

Could the next decade of Illinois politics take shape on a fair map?

One man stands in the way. And Illinoisan­s who have followed state government for more than a day can guess who that is.

House Speaker Mike Madigan for decades has drawn political maps to protect partisan allies and punish others. But if enough of his caucus members side with Pritzker, there could be a shot at themost reasonable map in a generation.

Madigan has made his career drawing maps. Three of them specifical­ly, following the 1980, 2000 and 2010 censuses. His first map was the main reason hewas able to ascend to the speakershi­p. The next two kept him there. Republican­s drew the map in the 1990s, which helped them take over Ma di gan’ s House for two short years.

Both parties play this game.

But Pritzker made a pledge to voters. On the campaign trail last year, he said hewould veto any map that is “drafted or created by legislator­s, political party leaders and/or their staffs or allies.” Sounds like another Madigan map wouldn’t make the cut.

The House Republican­s recently came out with a plan that they say would provide independen­t mapmaking, even though legis- lative leaders would have a voice in selecting the mapmaking commission. It’s not perfect, but it’s better than the status quo. And a constituti­onal amendment would be the bestway to go about long-lasting redistrict­ing reform.

Unfortunat­ely, the political numbers don’t seem to add up. It will be very difficult to get the supermajor­ity necessary to take mapmaking power out of political hands via a constituti­onal amendment, to say the least.

But there doesn’t necessaril­y have to be a constituti­onal amendment to stop gerrymande­ring. That’s where Pritzker comes in.

All the Illinois Constituti­on mandates is that a new map is passed into lawby June 30, 2021. The General Assembly approves the map and the governor signs it, with a backup plan if there isn’t an agreement by the June 30 deadline. Beyond that, there’s plenty of wiggle room.

Take these two scenar- ios.

In the first scenario, House and Senate Democrats pass a heavily partisan map to Pritzker’s desk on supermajor­ity votes. Pritzker vetoes the bill, keeping his promise. Democrats – still with supermajor­ity control – override Pritzker and the highly partisan map goes into effect.

Editorial boards and good government groups would rightfully cry bloody murder. But Madigan would get his map for the next 10 years. And Pritzker may have kept his promise in spirit. But voters might not see it thatway.

Here’s another hypothetic­al.

Pritzker assembles an independen­t commission to drawan alternativ­e to Madigan’s map. Plenty of academics and civic groups, such as the Brennan Center for Justice, have put together best practices for making such a commission. Madigan still draws his map. But due to Illinois’ constituti­onal backup plan if the General Assembly and governor can’t agree on district lines, the speaker must play his cards very carefully.

In this scenario, Madigan could get enough votes to send his map to Pritzker’s desk. But if Pritzker picks off enough override votes by presenting a viable alternativ­e to a hyperparti­san map, Madigan is faced with a choice: He can pass Pritzker’s independen­t map or sit on his hands. If he sits on his hands, which party draws the map essentiall­y comes downto a coin flip.

Democrats have won three of the last four occasions in the last 40 years. But the chance is still 50-50. So which isworse for Madigan? A100 percent chance of an independen­t map or a 50 percent chance of a Republican map? Maybe he goes with Option A: certainty.

Time will tell whether either of these scenarios plays out.

And in fact, state lawmakers may not even be the right men and women for the job.

The Illinois Supreme Court has left a narrow window open for a final option— a constituti­onal amendment initiated by citizens. Madigan’s lawyers have kicked off citizen-led referenda on fair maps twice before.

Reform groups could mount another ballot initiative campaign tailored to avoid the same fate. But that’s a tough call after being burned twice before.

In the end, redistrict­ing reform could come under the dome in Springfiel­d or by clipboards and signatures on street corners. Eitherway, those efforts are only helped by the governor holding on to his campaign promise.

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